Southwest Airlines Deploys AI to Autopilot Endpoint Management, Curbing Customer Disruptions
Breaking: Southwest Airlines Automates Endpoint Operations to Avert Customer Chaos
Southwest Airlines has implemented artificial intelligence and automation tools to prevent device failures from snarling flight operations, the company confirmed. The technology shift targets the airline's massive fleet of employee smartphones, tablets, and laptops, which now number over 85,000 devices.

Derek Whisenhunt, head of end user computing at Southwest, said the new system shifts IT from a reactive to a strategic posture. 'We now focus our team's time on proactive and preventative work, increasing the digital employee experience without waiting for issues to arise,' he told reporters.
How the System Works
Southwest deployed a digital employee experience (DEX) application from Nexthink several years ago. The software monitors device performance, application reliability, and IT support interactions across the airline's frontline workforce.
In recent years, Southwest split its endpoint management into two dedicated teams: a DEX operations team and a DEX engineering team. The operations team handles real-time monitoring while the engineering team focuses on forward-looking automations, according to Whisenhunt.
'If you go up to a customer service or a gate agent and you can see the line start to extend — or the customers start to get frustrated — that's either a ticket issue or a system issue.' — Derek Whisenhunt, head of end user computing, Southwest Airlines
Background: A Decade of Digitization
Southwest has been replacing paper-based processes with mobile devices and cloud applications for the past ten years. The transformation now touches all 72,000 employees, two-thirds of whom work in frontline roles such as pilots, gate agents, and maintenance crews.

Printed manuals for pilots and ground teams have been replaced by mobile devices. The airline supports approximately 50,000 employee smartphones and tablets, 20,000 laptops, and 15,000 PCs, Whisenhunt stated.
What This Means: Fewer Delays, Better Experiences
Device failures can directly impact passengers. With Southwest’s 800 Boeing 737 aircraft operating on tight turnaround times, a hardware or software glitch on an employee device can slow boarding, frustrate customers, and delay departures.
Whisenhunt emphasized the personal stake: 'We're impacting the employees' experience, we're impacting our customers' experience. In just that one scenario, we're drastically impacting our ability to turn aircraft.'
By deploying AI-driven automation, Southwest aims to catch potential issues before they affect the traveler. The airline expects fewer disruptions at gates, smoother operations for cabin crews, and higher overall efficiency across its network.
Industry Context
Other major airlines are also investing in endpoint management, but Southwest’s scale — over 85,000 devices for a 72,000-person workforce — makes its deployment notable. The approach could set a benchmark for how airlines handle the intersection of IT and frontline operations.
This is a breaking story. Check back for updates on Southwest’s endpoint management rollout.
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